System and method for surge protection and rate acceleration in a traffic director environment

ABSTRACT

Described herein are systems and methods for use with a load balancer or traffic director, and administration thereof. In accordance with an embodiment the system comprises a traffic director having one or more traffic director instances, which is configured to receive and communicate requests, from clients, to origin servers having one or more pools of servers. A traffic monitor, at the traffic director, monitors traffic, including the number of connections, between the traffic director instances and one or more of the resource servers within the origin servers. The traffic director can set a traffic rate which controls the traffic, including the number of connections, to provide surge protection, or rate acceleration/deceleration.

CLAIM OF PRIORITY

This application claims the benefit of priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/539,886, titled “SYSTEMS AND METHODS FOR USE WITH AN APPLICATION SERVER TRAFFIC DIRECTOR (CORE FEATURES)”, filed Sep. 27, 2011; and U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/539,900, titled “SYSTEMS AND METHODS FOR USE WITH AN APPLICATION SERVER TRAFFIC DIRECTOR (ADMIN FEATURES)”, filed Sep. 27, 2011; each of which applications are herein incorporated by reference.

COPYRIGHT NOTICE

A portion of the disclosure of this patent document contains material which is subject to copyright protection. The copyright owner has no objection to the facsimile reproduction by anyone of the patent document or the patent disclosure, as it appears in the Patent and Trademark Office patent file or records, but otherwise reserves all copyright rights whatsoever.

FIELD OF INVENTION

The invention is generally related to a load balancer or traffic director, for use in an application server, middleware machine or other computing environment, and is particularly related to a system and method for surge protection and rate acceleration in a traffic director environment.

BACKGROUND

A typical enterprise-level computing environment can include many different types of computing resources (e.g., web servers, application servers, database servers, or other types of resource servers) which are intended to be accessed over a network (e.g., a company's internal Ethernet network, or the Internet) by other computers, or by users operating various different types of computing devices. A familiar example is the use of a client computer, such as a laptop equipped with a web browser application, by which a user can access a web server via the Internet.

Today's organizations rely increasingly on their computing resources being readily available from almost any location, at all times, with a high level of performance. The task of ensuring that such resources are allocated efficiently often requires the use of a load balancing device to distribute requests from clients to target resources, in a fair manner according to its distribution policies. These are the types of environments that embodiments of the invention can be used with.

SUMMARY

Described herein are systems and methods for use with a load balancer or traffic director, and administration thereof. In accordance with an embodiment, the traffic director, referred to herein in some embodiments as “Oracle Traffic Director” (OTD), is provided as a software-based load balancer that can be used to deliver a fast, reliable, scalable, and secure platform for load-balancing Internet and other traffic to back-end origin servers, such as web servers, application servers, or other resource servers.

Embodiments of the traffic director are particularly useful in application server, middleware machine, and similar high-performance enterprise-level computing environments, such as Oracle WebLogic and Exalogic environments.

In accordance with an embodiment the system comprises a traffic director having one or more traffic director instances, which is configured to receive and communicate requests, from clients, to origin servers having one or more pools of servers. A traffic monitor, at the traffic director, monitors traffic, including the number of connections, between the traffic director instances and one or more of the resource servers within the origin servers. The traffic director can set a traffic rate which controls the traffic, including the number of connections, to provide surge protection, or rate acceleration/deceleration.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES

FIG. 1 illustrates a computing environment which includes a load balancer or traffic director, in accordance with an embodiment.

FIG. 2 illustrates the use of a traffic director with one or more pools or origin servers, in accordance with an embodiment.

FIG. 3 illustrates a traffic director architecture, in accordance with an embodiment.

FIG. 4 illustrates a traffic director administration environment and interface, in accordance with an embodiment.

FIG. 5 illustrates the use of surge protection in a traffic director, in accordance with an embodiment.

FIG. 6 illustrates the use of rate acceleration in a traffic director, in accordance with an embodiment.

FIG. 7 is a flowchart of a method for providing surge protection in a traffic director, in accordance with an embodiment.

FIG. 8 is a flowchart of a method for providing rate acceleration in a traffic director, in accordance with an embodiment.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

As described above, today's organizations rely increasingly on their computing resources being readily available from almost any location, at all times, with a high level of performance. The task of ensuring that such resources are allocated efficiently often requires the use of a load balancing device to distribute requests from clients to target resources, in a fair manner according to its distribution policies.

Described herein are systems and methods for use with a load balancer or traffic director, and administration thereof. In accordance with an embodiment, the traffic director, referred to herein in some embodiments as “Oracle Traffic Director” (OTD), is provided as a software-based load balancer that can be used to deliver a fast, reliable, scalable, and secure platform for load-balancing Internet and other traffic to back-end origin servers, such as web servers, application servers, or other resource servers.

Embodiments of the traffic director are particularly useful in application server, middleware machine, and similar high-performance enterprise-level computing environments, such as Oracle WebLogic and Exalogic environments.

In accordance with an embodiment, the traffic director serves as an entry point for traffic such as hypertext transfer protocol (HTTP) and hypertext transfer protocol secure (HTTPS) requests, which are received from clients or client devices, for communication to a back-end of resources or resource servers acting as origin servers. Each traffic director includes one or more traffic director instances defined by a configuration, wherein the configuration provides information about various elements of that instance, such as listeners, origin servers, failover groups, and logs.

Examples of the types of clients that can be used with the system include computer servers, laptop computers, portable devices such as smartphones, and other types of computing devices, some of which may include, e.g., a web browser application for accessing a web server.

Examples of the types of resources that can be used as origin servers include lightweight directory access protocol (LDAP) servers, web servers, multimedia servers, application servers, database servers, and other types of resources.

In accordance with an embodiment, the traffic director can perform tasks such as distributing requests to origin servers based on one or more load-balancing methods; routing requests based on specified rules; caching frequently accessed data; prioritize traffic; and controlling the quality of service.

From a performance perspective, in accordance with an embodiment, the traffic director can include an architecture that enables it to handle large volumes of traffic with low latency. For example, embodiments can be optimized for use within a high-performance computing environment such as, e.g., Oracle Exalogic Elastic Cloud, or to communicate with origin servers at the back-end using a high performance communication fabric such as, e.g., InfiniBand. In accordance with an embodiment, to support high availability, the traffic director can recognize failover groups of traffic director instances that provide active-passive or active-active failover. As the volume of traffic to a network increases, the traffic director environment can be scaled by reconfiguring the traffic director with additional back-end servers to which it can route requests, or by modifying the rate at which traffic is communicated.

From an administration perspective, in accordance with an embodiment, the traffic director is designed to be easy to install, configure, and use; and can include a simple, wizard-driven graphical interface, as well as a robust command-line interface, for use by an administrator in managing traffic director instances. For any particular organization, depending on their business requirements, such as the number of back-end applications for which they want to use the traffic director to balance requests, their internal requirements such as security, and the traffic director features they wish to use, the traffic director topology can be varied to address their needs. For example, a simple traffic director topology might initially utilize a single traffic director instance running on a dedicated compute node and distributing client requests to a pool of servers at the back-end. To avoid a single point of failure, an administrator can configure two homogenous traffic director instances running on different nodes and forming an active-passive failover pair. To improve resource utilization, an administrator can configure the two traffic director instances in active-active mode with two virtual IP addresses.

Glossary

In accordance with an embodiment, the following terms are used herein. It will be evident that, in accordance with other embodiments, additional and/or different terms can be used.

-   Configuration: A collection of configurable elements (e.g.,     metadata) that determines the run-time behavior of a traffic     director instance. In accordance with an embodiment, a typical     configuration contains definitions for listeners (e.g., IP address     and port combinations) on which the traffic director should listen     for requests, together with information about servers at the     back-end to which the requests should be sent. The traffic director     can read the configuration when a traffic director instance starts,     and while processing client requests. -   Instance (Traffic Director Instance): A traffic director server that     is instantiated from a configuration and deployed on an     administration node or the administration server. -   Cluster: A collection of two or more traffic director instances that     are created from the same configuration. -   Failover Group: Two or more traffic director instances grouped by a     virtual IP address (VIP). In accordance with an embodiment, a     failover group provides high availability in active-passive mode;     wherein requests are received at the VIP and routed to the instance     that is designated as the primary instance; if the primary instance     is not reachable, requests are routed to the backup instance. In     accordance with an embodiment, for active-active failover, two     failover groups are required, each with a unique VIP, but both     comprising the same nodes with the primary and backup roles     reversed; each instance in the failover group is designated as the     primary instance for one VIP, and the backup for the other VIP. -   Administration Server: A specially configured traffic director     instance that hosts the interfaces, including administration console     and command-line interface, through which an administrator can     create traffic director configurations, deploy them as instances on     administration nodes, and manage the instances. -   Administration Node: A physical server that is designated as a host     on which the administrator can deploy traffic director instances. In     accordance with an embodiment, on a given node, the administrator     can deploy only one instance of a configuration. -   INSTANCE_HOME: A directory of the administrator's choice, on the     administration server or an administration node, in which the     configuration data and binary files pertaining to traffic director     instances are stored. -   ORACLE_HOME: A directory of the administrator's choice in which the     administrator installs the traffic director binaries. -   Administration Console: A web-based graphical interface on the     administration server that the administrator can use to create,     deploy, and manage traffic director instances. -   Client: In accordance with an embodiment, an agent (e.g., a web     browser or an application) that sends requests (e.g., HTTP and HTTPS     requests) to traffic director instances. Examples of the types of     clients that can be used with the system include computer servers,     laptop computers, portable devices such as smartphones, and other     types of computing devices, some of which may include, e.g., a web     browser application for accessing a web server. -   Origin Server: In accordance with an embodiment, a resource or     server at the back-end, to which the traffic director forwards the     requests that it receives from clients, and from which it receives     responses to client requests. Examples of the types of resources     that can be used as origin servers include lightweight directory     access protocol (LDAP) servers, web servers, multimedia servers,     application servers, database servers, and other types of resources. -   Origin-server Pool: A collection of origin servers that host the     same application or service, and that the administrator can     load-balance by using the traffic director. In accordance with an     embodiment, the traffic director distributes client requests to     servers in the origin-server pool based on the load-distribution     method(s) that are specified for that pool. -   Virtual Server: A virtual entity within a traffic director server     instance that provides a unique IP address (or host name) and port     combination, through which the traffic director can serve requests     for one or more domains. In accordance with an embodiment, a traffic     director instance on a node can contain multiple virtual servers.     The administrator can configure settings such as the maximum number     of incoming connections specifically for each virtual server, and     can also customize how each virtual server handles requests.

FIG. 1 illustrates a computing environment which includes a load balancer or traffic director, in accordance with an embodiment. As shown in FIG. 1, in accordance with an embodiment, the traffic director 100 (referred to herein in some embodiments as Oracle Traffic Director (OTD)) can be deployed on one or more physical computer servers 101 (or similar computing devices that include a processor (CPU), memory, and storage), and can include one or more traffic director instances 102, 104, which in turn can communicate with one another using a high-availability heartbeat or similar means 106.

For any particular organization, depending on their business requirements, such as the number of back-end applications for which they want to use the traffic director to balance requests, their internal requirements such as security, and the traffic director features they wish to use, the traffic director topology can be varied to address their needs. The back-end can include one or more origin servers 110, examples of which can include LDAP servers 114, web servers 118, multimedia servers 122, application servers 126, and database servers 128. In accordance with an embodiment, the application server can be a WebLogic server (WLS). Other types of origin servers, and application servers, can be used, depending on the particular needs of the organization. Each of the origin servers can communicate with one another, and with the traffic director, via an internal network 130 such as an Ethernet network.

In accordance with an embodiment, the traffic director can receive requests from clients 134, via an external network 136, the Internet 138, and in the case of many organizations a firewall 139. Examples of the types of clients that can be used with the system include computer servers, laptop computers, portable devices such as smartphones, and other types of computing devices, some of which may include, e.g., a web browser application for accessing a web server.

FIG. 2 illustrates the use of a traffic director with one or more pools or origin servers, in accordance with an embodiment. In the example illustrated in FIG. 2, the traffic director is used with two pools, including a (first) pool of application servers 170, having four application servers, here indicated as A 172, B 174, C 176, D 178; and a (second) pool of web servers 180, having three web servers, here indicated as A 182, B 184, C 186. In accordance with other embodiments and examples, other types and numbers of pools and servers can be used, depending on the particular needs of the organization.

In the example illustrated in FIG. 2, the topology comprises two traffic director instances (102 and 104) forming an active-passive failover group 150, and including a single virtual IP address 190 for receipt of client requests. When the active instance (in this example instance 102) receives a request 190, 192, 194, it determines the server pool to which the request should be sent, and forwards the request 197, 198 to one of the servers in that pool, based on the load-distribution method(s) that are specified for that pool.

Although the example shown in FIG. 2 illustrates the use of two server pools at the back-end, an administrator can configure the traffic director to route requests to servers in multiple pools. In the active-passive setup illustrated in FIG. 2, one node in the failover group is redundant at any point in time. In accordance with an embodiment, to improve resource utilization, the administrator can configure the two traffic director instances in active-active mode with two virtual IP addresses; in this scenario each instance caters to requests received on one virtual IP address, and backs up the other instance.

FIG. 3 illustrates a traffic director architecture, in accordance with an embodiment. In accordance with an embodiment, the traffic director can include an architecture that enables it to handle large volumes of traffic with low latency. Embodiments can also be optimized for use within a high-performance computing environment, or to communicate with origin servers at the back-end using a high performance communication fabric.

As shown in FIG. 3, in accordance with an embodiment, the traffic director can include one or more Netscape portable runtime (NSPR) 202 and Network Security Services (NSS) 206 layers. In accordance with an embodiment, the traffic director can also include an HTTP engine 210 having one or more access control 212, logging 214, HTTP compression 216, I/O filter 218, error handling 220, rate shaping 222, intrusion detection 224, or other components; and a reverse proxy component 230 having one or more http client 232, response client 234, health check 236, routing policies 238, load controls 240, load balancer 244, WLS support 246, sticky routing 248, or other components. In accordance with an embodiment, the traffic director can also include an HTTP connection handler 250 having one or more acceptor threads 252, worker threads 254, keep-alive threads 256, or other components. In accordance with an embodiment, the traffic director can also include a TCP connection handler 260 having one or more TCP threads 262, load balancer 264, or other components. In accordance with an embodiment, the traffic director can also include one or more evens schedule 270, dynamic configuration 272, monitoring 274, or other components.

It will be evident that, in accordance with other embodiments, additional and/or different components can be used.

FIG. 4 illustrates a traffic director administration environment and interface, in accordance with an embodiment. From an administration perspective, the traffic director is designed to be easy to install, configure, and use; and can include a simple, wizard-driven graphical interface, as well as a robust command-line interface, for use by an administrator in managing traffic director instances. As shown in FIG. 4, in accordance with an embodiment, the traffic director can include one or more traffic director instances 280, 281, 282, wherein at least one of the instances is designated an administration server (280), while other instances are designated as administration nodes (281, 282).

In accordance with an embodiment, an administration environment 284 includes an administration interface 285, which in turn includes one or more of an administration console (GUI) 286 and/or a command line interface 288, that enables an administrator 290 to configure or otherwise administer 292 the traffic director, or its instances 294, 296.

Surge Protection

Load balancers can help prevent server outages that would be otherwise caused by an unanticipated surge of traffic to, e.g., an origin server. In accordance with an embodiment, the traffic director provides an intelligent form of surge protection, by monitoring traffic to the origin servers and queuing connections as necessary, so that the traffic does not exceed certain surge limits.

In accordance with an embodiment, when surge protection is enabled, the traffic director will not open more concurrent connections to a server than a configured capacity. This limit or maximum capacity can be specified by an element <max-connections>. If an origin server reaches its maximum connection capacity, then no requests requiring new connections will be routed to this server until some of its existing connections have been released. If all origin servers have reached their connection capacities, then subsequent requests that need new connections will be rejected, and error messages sent.

FIG. 5 illustrates the use of surge protection in a traffic director, in accordance with an embodiment. As shown in FIG. 5, a traffic director environment is provided, including a traffic director 400 having one or more traffic director instances 402, and origin servers 420 having one or more pools of servers 422. Each pool of servers can include one or more resource servers 424.

In accordance with an embodiment, the traffic director includes a traffic monitor 404, which enables the traffic director to monitor traffic, including the number of connections 406, between the traffic director instances and one or more of the resource servers within the origin servers. In accordance with an embodiment, the traffic director also includes a connection queue 408, which can be used to queue connections.

During operation, while requests from clients are being communicated to the origin servers, the traffic monitor receives feedback 430 describing traffic, including the number of connections between the traffic director and the resource servers. If the traffic monitor determines that the traffic, including the number of connections, between the traffic director and a particular resource server exceeds a maximum amount allowed for that resource server, then the traffic director can temporarily direct subsequent traffic and connections away from the resource server and to the connection queue 434, which has the effect of temporarily reducing or limiting 436 the amount of traffic flowing to that resource server.

In accordance with an embodiment, the traffic director can optionally provide 440 an informational message 442, e.g., to a log file or to an administrator, to inform them of the traffic surge, and the action taken. The traffic monitor can continue to monitor traffic/connections to the origin servers, for subsequent adjustment to the connection queue as necessary.

Rate Shaping (Acceleration/Deceleration)

In accordance with an embodiment, the traffic director also supports request rate acceleration, which allows graceful addition of a server to origin server pools, by gradually accelerating traffic to newly added servers, as opposed to overwhelming those servers with a massive amount of traffic. Request rate acceleration is adaptive, inasmuch as it can incorporate a number of dynamically monitored parameters, such as number of active connections or current load, maximum number of connections or the capacity of the origin servers. The feature can also be extended to provide request-rate deceleration, whereby the traffic director can effectively ramp down traffic directed at an origin server, so that an administrator can take it offline when its traffic is completely quiesced, e.g., for scheduled maintenance purposes. Together, both rate acceleration and deceleration can be used to shape the rate of traffic to the origin servers.

In accordance with an embodiment, when an origin server comes online, the traffic director will not send requests to the server at its full capacity immediately, but will instead gradually increase the sending rate over a period of time. This can provide several benefits: for example, when an origin server is starting up, it will need a certain period of time to load data and allocate various resources; during this warm-up process, the origin server's response time may be slow, and sending a large number of requests to the server will make the server performance even worse and may cause unexpected behaviors of the server. Additionally, if an origin server is problematic, it may fail in responding to some or most of the requests, and its status may change frequently between “UP” and “DOWN” status; for such a server, it is better not to send many requests to it at the beginning of its “UP” status. Furthermore, if a load balancing algorithm such as least connection count is used, the traffic director may send many requests to a new server and may flood the server at beginning time, because a new server's connection count would be zero; rate accelerating can alleviate this problem.

In accordance with an embodiment, the traffic director will gradually increase the traffic rate to a new server until the rate reaches the server's configured maximum rate (max-connections). Rate accelerating can be achieved via connection capacity adjustment, and the adjustment of capacity can be either time based (i.e., increasing the connection capacity by a fixed value per unit time.) or window-based (i.e., increasing the connection capacity by a value after it receives a certain number of responses.

FIG. 6 illustrates the use of rate acceleration in a traffic director, in accordance with an embodiment. As shown in FIG. 6, a traffic director environment is again provided, including a traffic director 450 having one or more traffic director instances 452, and origin servers 470 having one or more pools of servers 472. Each pool of servers can include one or more (existing) resource servers 474. The traffic director again includes a traffic monitor 454, which enables the traffic director to monitor traffic, including the number of connections 456, between the traffic director instances and one or more of the resource servers within the origin servers.

In accordance with an embodiment, the traffic director can set a traffic rate 458 which initially controls the traffic, including the number of connections 476, between the traffic director instances and one or more (existing) resource servers within the origin servers.

Subsequently, if the traffic monitor determines the presence 481 of additional (new) resource servers 480 within the origin servers, to which the traffic director can direct traffic, the traffic monitor can wait for a period of time, in some instances maintaining the traffic at its initial rate, before gradually shaping or adjusting the traffic rate 484 to direct traffic/connections between the traffic director instances and those new resource servers 486.

Request rate shaping (acceleration/deceleration) differs from the surge protection features described earlier—although both mechanisms can be used to limit request traffic, they are based on different criteria; in particular, rate shaping takes limiting actions based on request properties, while surge protection is primarily based on the amount of concurrent connections to origin servers.

In accordance with an embodiment, a time-based method for the connection capacity adjustment, and a configuration parameter called “ramp-up-time” can be used, which specifies how long traffic director takes to ramp the sending rate up to the server's configured capacity:

Adjusted-Connection-Capacity=MAX{(max-connections*MIN{1, server-up-time/ramp-up-time}), 1}

When request rate acceleration is enabled, the adjusted capacity instead of the configured hard limit (max connections) can be used by the traffic director to make routing decisions. As described above, if all the servers have reached their adjusted connection capacities, then new requests will be rejected.

In accordance with an embodiment, to configure surge protection and request rate acceleration for use with the traffic director, the elements called “max-connections” and “ramp-up-time” can be can be added in the element <origin-server> in a server.xml file for the desired resource server, parameters and examples of which are provided in Table 1, and Listing 1 respectively.

TABLE 1 Element Occurrences Description Value max-connections 0 or 1 The maximum number of concurrent 0 or positive connections to a server. Users must integer. The configure max-connections with a maximum positive value, if they want to enable allowable value the features Request Rate is 20480 and Accelerating and Surge Protection. If the default value 0 is specified, the Request Rate value is 0 (no Accelerating and Origin Server Surge limit). Protection will be disabled for the server. ramp-up-time 0 or 1 The time in seconds that Denali takes Positive integer. to ramp the sending rate up to the capacity of a newly up origin server. If the parameter is not specified, request rate accelerating will not be activated for the server.

Listing 1   <server> . . . <reverse-proxy> <server-pool> <name>serverpool1</name> <load-distribution>weighted-round-robin</load-distribution>  <origin-server>   <host>server1</host>   <port>80</port>   <protocol>HTTP</protocol>   <weight>10</weight>   <max-connections>50</max-connections>   <ramp-up-time>600</ramp-up-time>   </origin-server>  <origin-server>   <host>server2</host>   <port>80</port>   <protocol>HTTP</protocol>   <weight>20</weight>   <max-connections>100</max-connections>   <ramp-up-time>300</ramp-up-time>   </origin-server> </server-pool> . . . </reverse-proxy> . . . </server>

FIG. 7 is a flowchart of a method for providing surge protection in a traffic director, in accordance with an embodiment. As shown in FIG. 7, at step 490, a traffic director environment is provided, including a traffic director having one or more traffic director instances, and origin servers having one or more pools of servers. At step 492, a traffic monitor at the traffic director monitors traffic, including the number of connections, between the traffic director instances and one or more resource servers within the origin servers. At step 494, if the traffic monitor determines that the traffic, including the number of connections, between the traffic director and a particular resource server exceeds a maximum amount allowed for that resource server, then the traffic director will temporarily direct subsequent traffic and connections away from the resource server and to a connection queue. At step 496, the traffic director can optionally provide an informational message, e.g., to a log file or to an administrator to inform of the traffic surge, and will continue to monitor traffic/connections to the origin servers, for subsequent adjustment to the connection queue as necessary.

FIG. 8 is a flowchart of a method for providing rate acceleration in a traffic director, in accordance with an embodiment. As shown in FIG. 8, at step 502, a traffic director environment is again provided, including a traffic director having one or more traffic director instances, and origin servers having one or more pools of servers. At step 504, using information from a traffic monitor, the traffic director can set a traffic rate which initially controls the traffic, including the number of connections, between the traffic director instances and one or more (existing) resource servers within the origin servers. At step 506, the traffic monitor can determine the presence of additional (new) resource servers within the origin servers, to which the traffic director can direct traffic. At step 508, the traffic director can wait for a period of time, before gradually shaping or adjusting the traffic rate, to direct traffic/connections between the traffic director instances and those new resource servers.

Although not illustrated in FIG. 8, as described above, in accordance with an embodiment a similar technique can be use to monitor and gradually shape or adjust the traffic rate to decelerate traffic to an existing resource server, e.g., so that the server can be taken offline when its traffic is completely quiesced.

The present invention may be conveniently implemented using one or more conventional general purpose or specialized digital computer, computing device, machine, or microprocessor, including one or more processors, memory and/or computer readable storage media programmed according to the teachings of the present disclosure. Appropriate software coding can readily be prepared by skilled programmers based on the teachings of the present disclosure, as will be apparent to those skilled in the software art.

In some embodiments, the present invention includes a computer program product which is a non-transitory storage medium or computer readable medium (media) having instructions stored thereon/in which can be used to program a computer to perform any of the processes of the present invention. The storage medium can include, but is not limited to, any type of disk including floppy disks, optical discs, DVD, CD-ROMs, microdrive, and magneto-optical disks, ROMs, RAMs, EPROMs, EEPROMs, DRAMs, VRAMs, flash memory devices, magnetic or optical cards, nanosystems (including molecular memory ICs), or any type of media or device suitable for storing instructions and/or data.

The foregoing description of the present invention has been provided for the purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise forms disclosed. Although some of the described embodiments describe features in the context of an Oracle Traffic Director environment, the described features can also be used in the context of other computing environments. Many modifications and variations will be apparent to the practitioner skilled in the art. The embodiments were chosen and described in order to best explain the principles of the invention and its practical application, thereby enabling others skilled in the art to understand the invention for various embodiments and with various modifications that are suited to the particular use contemplated. It is intended that the scope of the invention be defined by the following claims and their equivalence. 

What is claimed is:
 1. A system for use in a computing environment which includes a traffic director component, comprising: a traffic director having one or more traffic director instances, which is configured to receive and communicate requests, from clients, to origin servers having one or more pools of servers; a traffic monitor, at the traffic director, which monitors traffic, including the number of connections, between the traffic director instances and one or more of the resource servers within the origin servers; and wherein the traffic director can set a traffic rate which controls the traffic, including the number of connections.
 2. The system of claim 1, wherein information provided by the traffic monitor is used for surge protection, including wherein, if the traffic monitor determines that the traffic, including the number of connections, between the traffic director and a particular resource server exceeds a maximum amount allowed for that resource server, then the traffic director will temporarily direct subsequent traffic and connections away from the particular resource server, and to a connection queue.
 3. The system of claim 2, wherein the traffic director optionally provides an informational message to a log file or to an administrator to inform of the traffic surge, and continues to monitor traffic and connections to the origin servers, for subsequent adjustment to the connection queue as necessary.
 4. The system of claim 1, wherein information provided by the traffic monitor is used for traffic shaping, including wherein the traffic director initially sets, and subsequently adjusts, a traffic rate which controls the traffic, including the number of connections, between the traffic director instances and one or more resource servers within the origin servers.
 5. The system of claim 4, wherein, when the traffic monitor determines the presence of additional or new resource servers within the origin servers, the traffic director gradually shapes or adjusting the traffic rate, to direct traffic/connections between the traffic director instances and those additional or new resource servers.
 6. The system of claim 4, wherein, in response to an instruction to decelerate traffic to a particular resource server within the origin servers, the traffic director gradually shapes or adjusts the traffic rate, to reduce traffic/connections between the traffic director instances and that particular resource server.
 7. A method for use in a computing environment which includes a traffic director component, comprising the steps of: providing a traffic director having one or more traffic director instances, which is configured to receive and communicate requests, from clients, to origin servers having one or more pools of servers; providing a traffic monitor, at the traffic director, which monitors traffic, including the number of connections, between the traffic director instances and one or more of the resource servers within the origin servers; and wherein the traffic director can set a traffic rate which controls the traffic, including the number of connections.
 8. The method of claim 7, wherein information provided by the traffic monitor is used for surge protection, including wherein, if the traffic monitor determines that the traffic, including the number of connections, between the traffic director and a particular resource server exceeds a maximum amount allowed for that resource server, then the traffic director will temporarily direct subsequent traffic and connections away from the particular resource server, and to a connection queue.
 9. The method of claim 8, wherein the traffic director optionally provides an informational message to a log file or to an administrator to inform of the traffic surge, and continues to monitor traffic and connections to the origin servers, for subsequent adjustment to the connection queue as necessary.
 10. The method of claim 7, wherein information provided by the traffic monitor is used for traffic shaping, including wherein the traffic director initially sets, and subsequently adjusts, a traffic rate which controls the traffic, including the number of connections, between the traffic director instances and one or more resource servers within the origin servers.
 11. The method of claim 10, wherein, when the traffic monitor determines the presence of additional or new resource servers within the origin servers, the traffic director gradually shapes or adjusts the traffic rate, to direct traffic/connections between the traffic director instances and those additional or new resource servers.
 12. The method of claim 10, wherein, in response to an instruction to decelerate traffic to a particular resource server within the origin servers, the traffic director gradually shapes or adjusts the traffic rate, to reduce traffic/connections between the traffic director instances and that particular resource server.
 13. A non-transitory computer readable medium, including instructions stored thereon which when read and executed by one or more computers cause the one or more computers to perform the steps comprising: providing a traffic director having one or more traffic director instances, which is configured to receive and communicate requests, from clients, to origin servers having one or more pools of servers; providing a traffic monitor, at the traffic director, which monitors traffic, including the number of connections, between the traffic director instances and one or more of the resource servers within the origin servers; and wherein the traffic director can set a traffic rate which controls the traffic, including the number of connections. 